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Heritage BC
Membership Donate Newsletter
  • About

    About

    • What We Do
    • Advocacy
    • Heritage Update
    • Plans and Reports
    • Membership
    • Donate
    • Sponsors
    • Board of Directors
    • Staff
  • Events & Activities

    Events & Activities

    • 2022 Conference
    • BC Heritage Awards
    • Heritage Week
    • Dates to Know
  • Learning Centre

    Learning Centre

    • ICH: Creating a Community-Based Inventory
    • Intangible Cultural Heritage
    • Climate Adaptation: Making a Case
    • Climate Adaptation: Framework and Implementation
    • Setting the Bar: A Reconciliation Guide for Heritage
    • A Guide to Making a Case for Heritage
    • Heritage Conservation Tools: Resource Guides
    • Webinars On-Demand
    • Heritage Workshops
    • Other Heritage Education Programs
  • Cultural Maps

    Cultural Maps

    • Submerged Heritage Resources
    • Columbia Basin Region Heritage Places
    • Francophone Historic Places Map
    • Chinese Canadian Historic Places Map
    • Japanese Canadian Historic Places
    • South Asian Canadian Map
    • War Monuments and Memorials Map
    • Mapping Heritage
  • Resources

    Resources

    • Accessibility for Historic Places
    • Conservation in BC Reports
    • Definitions and Heritage FAQs
    • Funding Opportunities
    • Heritage Real Estate
    • State of Heritage: Provincial Roundtables
    • Indigenous Cultural Heritage
    • Local Government: Library of Source Documents
    • Racism: Do Not Let the Forgetting Prevail
    • Heritage Quick Studies
    • Other Tools, Publications, Guides
  • Heritage Legacy Fund

    Heritage Legacy Fund

    • Heritage Legacy Fund Review
    • Who Benefits?
    • Past Grant Recipients
    • Climate Disaster Response Fund
  • Job Board

    Job Board

    • Job Hunting Resources
    • Job Postings
    • Submit a Job
  • Contact
  • 1. Setting the Bar: Heritage and Reconciliation Pledge
  • 2. Setting the Bar: Acknowledging Land and People
  • 3. Setting the Bar: Celebrating Days of Recognition and Commemoration
  • 4. Setting the Bar: With a Commitment to Learn
  • 5. Setting the Bar: Committing to Strategic Organizational Diversity
  • 6. Setting the Bar: Mission-Making Room for Reconciliation
  • 7. Setting the Bar: Possession, Interpretation, Repatriation and Cultural Care
  • 8. Setting the Bar: Shared Decision Making
  • 9. Setting the Bar: Statements of Significance and other heritage planning documents
  • 10. Setting the Bar: Heritage Conservation Tools, Local Government Act

    Setting the Bar: A Guide to Achieve New Standards for Reconciliation within the Heritage Sector

    cover image of Setting the Bar resource guide

    Understanding heritage as the human imprint on the earth, Heritage BC recognizes that heritage professionals, volunteers, and enthusiasts must fully commit to learning about and respecting the diversity and inclusivity of experiences and perspectives that form our local and provincial heritage.

    Download the full document

    Heritage BC recognizes that the heritage field has its roots in the Western, colonial systems of knowledge and practice, which have been imposed upon other cultures and peoples. Today, there is a movement to acknowledge with humility the harm that this has caused and to acknowledge the need for redress.

    Heritage BC also recognizes reconciliation will not be achieved through a single process, but it requires an ongoing commitment to make things better, and to be accountable, through a range of actions that are carefully developed according to the needs and circumstances of each situation.

    “Setting the Bar” offers a set of ten standards and calls to action to drive heritage organizations forward, beyond conversation, to take concrete, measurable action. This will prompt each one of us to act and to reframe the embedded systems and challenge the all-too-familiar contexts of our work. Each action can be easily achieved with a willingness to be open to ideas and perspectives, as well as a willingness for self-reflection and the resolve for quantifiable improvement.

    A note about “Setting the Bar”

    Created in 2021 with the support of an extraordinary group of advisors, this document is part of Heritage BC’s commitment to support BC’s heritage sector’s efforts toward redress and reconciliation and expanded recognition of cultural heritage of Indigenous and culturally diverse peoples.

    We recognize that reconciliation will not be accomplished through a single process and there are countless other actions and pathways. The 10 actions that make up “Setting the Bar” can be undertaken in any order.

    This is a ‘living’ document that will be updated, improved, and expanded through experience and advice.

    Heritage BC is indebted to those who took the time to share their expertise and advice.

    • Janice Alpine: Ktunaxa Nation Council, Tourism Engagement/Business Development Officer
    • Angie Bain, Researcher, Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs; Director, Heritage BC
    • Marsha ‘Ḵwa’x̱i’latł’ Dufresne: Director, Tumbler Ridge Global Geopark
    • Sharanjit Kaur Sandhra: PhD Candidate, History, UBC; Co-Curator, Sikh Heritage Museum, National Historic Site Gur Sikh Temple
    • Vincent Kwan: City of Vancouver (formerly with the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Classical Chinese Gardens); Director, Heritage BC
    • Silvia Mangue: Founder and Manager, Kulea Culture; President, BC Black History Awareness Society
    • Kamala Todd: Adjunct Professor, Urban Studies SFU and UBC SCARP; Community Planner; Filmmaker

    Heritage BC also thanks BC Museums Association for its support and advice.

    The following are those actions that are well within the capabilities of all heritage organizations and that, collectively, will result in an impactful difference.

    “Diversity is what makes us different, but inclusion is what makes us strong.”

    Advisor to the project

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    As an organization of provincial scope, Heritage BC recognizes that its members, and the local history and heritage they seek to preserve, occupy the lands and territories of B.C.’s Indigenous peoples. Heritage BC asks its members and everyone working in the heritage sector to reflect on the places where they reside and work, and to respect the diversity of cultures and experiences that form the richness of our provincial heritage.